State press regulation is wrong, says Jeremy Hunt

Jeremy Hunt said he wanted to see industry-led independent press regulation PA

State regulation of the press would be "completely the wrong
direction to go" but there must be a way to ensure all newspapers sign
up to any body that replaces the current system, the Culture Secretary
said today.

Jeremy Hunt said he wanted to see industry-led independent
regulation which commanded the confidence of the public replace the
Press Complaints Commission.

But he said there must be a way to ensure everyone took part and
added that he was "completely open-minded" about whether some sort of
financial penalty should be imposed on those newspapers who fail to sign
up to the new body.

"We would like to continue with a light-touch approach but it
does have to command the confidence of the public after a very, very bad
period," he said.

"The reason that the Prime Minister and I have hesitated to say
that we want to keep self-regulation is because self-regulation is very
often characterised as something which is very similar to the current
system and clearly some very significant failings have emerged on that."

Giving evidence to the Joint Committee on Privacy and
Injunctions, Mr Hunt said independent regulation was "not statutory
regulation, it's most certainly not statutory regulation of content by
politicians, which I think everyone is agreed would be completely the
wrong direction to go".

"I'm quite happy to say my preferred solution would be
industry-led independent regulation but it must have the confidence of
the public," he said.

"And to have the confidence of the public that means that when
there is a question over whether the editors' code has been breached or
not, the decision needs to be made by a body which is sufficiently
independent of both the editors and proprietors, as well as of
politicians and ministers.

"It needs to be a body that has effective sanction-making power
such that the press really don't want to breach those regulations.

"It needs to be a body that by whatever means everyone is a part of.

"It needs to be a body that is properly financed.

"There are a number of requirements but I think it's entirely
possible for the industry to come forward with a way of meeting all
those issues."

Mr Hunt added that the industry may also want "a level of
statutory under-pinning for this, as our way, for example, of making
sure everyone is part of it".

"It may be that they say they would like a sort of financial penalty as a way of making sure everyone takes part."

One suggestion has been that only those signing up to the new
body would be officially classed as newspapers and able to avoid VAT on
sales.